Customer Logins

Obtain the data you need to make the most informed decisions by accessing our extensive portfolio of information, analytics, and expertise. Sign in to the product or service center of your choice.

Customer Logins

My Logins

All Customer Logins
S&P Global Commodity Insights
  • S&P Global
  • S&P Dow Jones Indices
  • S&P Global Engineering Solutions
  • S&P Global Market Intelligence
  • S&P Global Mobility
  • S&P Global Commodity Insights
  • S&P Global Ratings
  • S&P Global Sustainable1
Close
Discover more about S&P Global’s offerings.
Investor Relations
  • Investor Relations Overview
  • Presentations
  • Investor Fact Book
  • News Releases
  • Quarterly Earnings
  • SEC Filings & Reports
  • Executive Committee
  • Merger Information
  • Governance
  • Stock & Dividends
  • Shareholder Services
  • Contact
English
  • Español
  • 中文网站
  • Português
  • 한국어
  • हिंदी
  • English (Australia)
  • 日本語
Support
  • Get Support
  • System Notifications
  • Delivery Platforms
  • Regulatory Engagement
Login
  • Commodity Insights Login
  • Access IHS Markit Products
Register
  • Commodities
  • Products & Services
  • Methodology
  • Market Insights
  • Energy Transition
  • Events
  • S&P Global
  • S&P Dow Jones Indices
  • S&P Global Engineering Solutions
  • S&P Global Market Intelligence
  • S&P Global Mobility
  • S&P Global Commodity Insights
  • S&P Global Ratings
  • S&P Global Sustainable1
  • Oil Upstream LNG Natural Gas Electric Power Coal Shipping Petrochemicals Metals Agriculture
    Latest in Commodities
    Listen: The future of naphtha and diesel flows after EU sanctions

    What will replace Russian diesel and naphtha flows to Europe after EU sanctions take effect on 5...

    UK's January road fuel sales recover to highest for month since 2020

    The UK's road fuel sales recovered from seasonal lows in January to hit their highest average for...

    China to cut clean oil product exports in Feb amid strong domestic demand

    China's refineries will cut clean oil product exports in February as domestic demand in January was...

  • Oil LNG Natural Gas Electric Power Coal Shipping Petrochemicals Metals Agriculture Energy Transition
    I Need
    Market Insights and Analytics Commodity Prices and Essential Market Data Real-Time News, Prices and Analysis Maps and Geospatial Data Forward Curves and Risk Valuation Data
    Data and Partner Delivery
  • Our Methodology Methodology & Specifications Price Assessments Subscriber Notes Price Symbols Symbol Search & Directories Corrections Complaints
    References
    Market On Close Index Sourced Data (Survey) Methodology Review & Change MOC Participation Guidelines Holiday SEE ALL REFERENCE TOOLS
  • Latest News Headlines All Topics Videos Podcasts Special Reports Infographics Insights Magazine Insight Blog    Research & Analysis Top 250 Rankings   
    Latest in Market Insights
  • PLATTS ANALYTICS PRODUCT PLATFORM
    ACCESS ANALYTICS HUB
  • All Events Webinars Conferences Methodology Education Training and eLearning Forums Global Energy Awards    Global Metals Awards   
    Featured Events
    Forums London Energy Forum
    • 27 Feb 2023
    • London
    Forums CERAWeek
    • 27 Feb 2023
    • London
    Conferences ,Forums FUJCON 2023
    • 13 Mar 2023
    • Fujairah, UAE

Venezuela production decline threatens to starve heavy refiners

23 August 2018 Ha Nguyen

Venezuelan production has faced an unprecedented decline in recent months, June 2018. Production is estimated at only 1.1 million barrels per day (MMb/d), which is a 280,000 barrel per day (b/d) or20% drop from the previous month and a yearly decline of 920,000 b/d (46%). The sanctions put in place by the Trump administration directly preceded the decline in production; however, they were simply the straw that broke the camel's back. The seeds of decline were sown in decades of heavy-handed political intrusion into the operations of Petróleos de Venezuela, S.A. (PDVSA), the Venezuelan state-owned oil and natural gas company. This interference began with the socialist leader Hugo Chavez, whose policies have continued and intensified under the rule of his protégé, current Venezuelan president Nicolás Maduro.

The decline in Venezuelan production clearly affected the crude slate of US Gulf Coast refiners in first quarter 2018. Several major refiners, built to process heavy crudes, have either reduced imports of Venezuelan crude or stopped imports all together. Refiners in China, India, and the United States have replaced the Venezuelan imports with a mixture of different crude types. In cases where they continue to accept Venezuelan crude, many refiners are requesting discounts to compensate for deteriorating crude quality, including unacceptable water and metal content, which is likely linked to operational problems at Venezuela's heavy oil upgraders.

Phillips 66's Sweeny refinery imported an average of 123,000 b/d of Venezuelan crude from 2012 through 2017, yet imported no Venezuelan crude in first quarter 2018 (see Figure 1). Instead, the refiner took to increasing Canadian imports, predominately heavy and light synthetic crude oil, and supplemented with Mexican Maya and Colombian Castilla. Similarly, the PBF Energy refinery in Chalmette, Louisiana, United States, began continuously importing Colombian Castilla in August 2017 and imported Mexican Maya every month during first quarter 2018. Citgo's US refineries in Corpus Christi, Texasand Lake Charles, Louisiana, have employed different tactics. Their Venezuelan crude imports remained flat, due to the refineries' physical proximity to PDVSA. However, both refineries took in 11 shipments below 40,000 b/d of various crudes, including Chad's Doba, Colombian Castilla, and Brazilian Marlim.

https://cdn.ihs.com/www/images/Venezuela1.png

The Mexican and Colombian energy sectors are in a strong position to take advantage of the decline in Venezuelan crude. Mexican crude exports have remained relatively high, even while production continues to decrease because of the declining domestic refinery utilization rates, which has been below 40% since July 2017. Mexico exported 1.5 MMb/d of crude in February 2018, the largest volume since at least 2012, and shipped 833,000 b/d of that volume to the United States (the largest volume since November 2014). Colombia, which has been struggling with low crude prices since 2014, has also begun to increase exports in the recent higher-priced environment. Exports to the United States averaged 372,000 b/d in the first quarter 2018, compared with 273,000 b/d in first quarter 2017. The 2017 volume wasthe lowest export level to the United States since the general strike in January 2003.

China's crude imports also reflect the shift away from Venezuelan products. Venezuelan imports decreased by 10%, or 390,000 b/d, during first quarter 2018. China normally uses this sour crude for asphalt production. China has recently increased imports from medium, sour Kuwait Blend from Kuwait and medium, sweet Libra from Brazil (see Figure 2). In fact, Kuwait recently outranked Venezuela as the ninth-largest exporter to China. In the past five years, China's crude imports have been slightly lighter, as US unconventional production and Brazil's pre-salt production increased and as China has boosted imports of African light, sweet barrels. From now until 2040, Chinese and US imported crude are expected to contain more bottoms and higher sulfur content.

https://cdn.ihs.com/www/images/Venezuela2.png

India's imports from Venezuela have slipped from third to fifth place since 2017. Estimated delivered imports for July are approximately 240,000 b/d, or almost 50% lower than August 2017. Iran will be another unstable source of heavy crude to India in the next few years. The country's refiners will have to rely on their largest heavy importer, Iraq. India has increased crude consumption of Middle Eastern sour crudes, which will continue to displace Latin sours over time.

Coker capacity runs tight

Global heavy, sour crude (HSR) production - which involves -crude streams with quality properties of less than 24° American Petroleum Institute gravity (API) and sulfur content greater than 1%- was slightly more than 9.0 MMb/d in 2017 and should grow to 12.7 MMb/d by 2040. Major HSR producing regions are Canada, Latin America, and the Middle East. IHS Markit expects Latin HSR crude supply to decline as upstream resources deplete and Venezuela's economic crisis continues to unfold.

The world's heavy sour crude production contains roughly 3 MMb/d of vacuum bottoms, most of which is consumed in the world's 7.8 MMb/d of coking capacity, about 75% of which is located in North America and Asia (see Figure 3). Vacuum bottoms from medium and light sour barrels fill the remaining capacity. Venezuelan production declines to zero in 2019 and thereafter, IHS Markit estimates that ~400,000 b/d of vacuum bottoms - equal to about 5% of global coking capacity - would be removed from the market. This would result in a significant shortfall of feedstock for coking operations and likely cause a notable reduction in light-heavy price differentials compared to the IHS base forecast.

https://cdn.ihs.com/www/images/Venezuela3.png

Sour price differentials

Western Canadian Select ([WCS], which includes crude streams with quality properties of 22.2°API and 3.95% sulfur, competes with other Latin heavy, sour crudes such as Mexican Maya (21.5° API, 3.40% sulfur), Venezuelan Merey (18.0° API, 2.30% sulfur), and Colombian Castilla (18.8° API, 2.00% sulfur). WCS-Latin HSR differentials narrowed from $30/bbl in 2012 to $9/bbl in 2017 due to recent pipeline expansions in the United States. As a result of regulatory delays, both the Kinder Morgan's Trans Mountain pipeline expansion and TransCanada's Keystone XL pipeline are now expected to start up in 2021.Considering these conditions, we expect marginal barrels of heavy supply to clear through the US Gulf Coast in 2021 and beyond. IHS Markit expects the WCS-Latin HSR differentials to narrow by approximately $6/bbl after both pipelines start up. WCS imports will continue to displace Latin HSR imports as more Latin HSR barrels shift to Asia.

Crude Oil Supply Analytics from IHS Markit: Understand the latest developments in upstream projects and their impact on global oil supply in the short and long-term. Find out more about the IHS Markit Crude Oil Supply Analytics service.

Visit: www.ihsmarkit.com/COSA

Posted 23 August 2018 by Ha Nguyen, Executive Director, Global Oil, S&P Global Commodity Insights



This article was published by S&P Global Commodity Insights and not by S&P Global Ratings, which is a separately managed division of S&P Global.

Previous Energy & Natural Resources Post All Energy & Natural Resources Next Energy & Natural Resources Post

Related Posts

  • FERC’s proposed interconnection reforms provide hope for growing renewable project backlog
  • African OPEC heavyweights still underproducing, but 2023 has started brighter
  • Gorgon 1 Project development : What effect does a Carbon Tax have on the project’s development economic viability?
  • A year like no other: How 2022 supercharged the energy transition in the global power sector
  • ExxonMobil continues portfolio transformation with its latest divestment in Iraq
  • The Cambo Field Development
  • Can CNOOC reap the rewards that beneficial fiscal terms offer?
  • India’s power sector prepares for another hot summer in 2023

Explore

RELATED INDUSTRIES & TOPICS
  • Energy & Natural Resources
  • Government Policy & Regulations

Recommended for you

  • Energy Solutions
  • Consulting
  • Upstream Oil & Gas
Subscribe to the Blog

Receive monthly energy insights from our blog right in your inbox.

Subscribe

CERAWeek 2023

March 6 – 10 in Houston, TX
LEARN MORE
Subscribe to RSS Feed

Follow Us

Mar 23
SPGlobalEnergy@SPGlobalEnergy

RT @SPGCIPetchems: Our #SPWPC Panel on Energy Transition 'The Increasing Interaction between Chemicals, Refining and Agri' Is well underway…

Mar 23
Jan 25
SPGlobalEnergy@SPGlobalEnergy

RT @SPGSustainable1: In our most recent report, we outline nine trends we see rising in prominence in the #sustainability landscape during…

Jan 25
Dec 31
SPGlobalEnergy@SPGlobalEnergy

𝗛𝗮𝗽𝗽𝘆 𝗡𝗲𝘄 𝗬𝗲𝗮𝗿! 𝗧𝗿𝗮𝗻𝘀𝗶𝘁𝗶𝗼𝗻 - A new journey for a new year! This account will be retired tomorrow. To keep up to da… https://t.co/Qaj4sgwJHx

Dec 31
Dec 30
SPGlobalEnergy@SPGlobalEnergy

𝗜𝗺𝗽𝗼𝗿𝘁𝗮𝗻𝘁 𝗡𝗲𝘄𝘀! 𝗧𝗿𝗮𝗻𝘀𝗶𝘁𝗶𝗼𝗻 - This account will be retired in 2 days. To keep up to date with the latest… https://t.co/nB3tSHqnt5

Dec 30
{"items" : [ {"name":"share","enabled":true,"desc":"<strong>Share</strong>","mobdesc":"Share","options":[ {"name":"facebook","url":"https://www.facebook.com/sharer.php?u=http%3a%2f%2fwww.spglobal.com%2fcommodityinsights%2fen%2fci%2fresearch-analysis%2fvenezuela-production-decline.html","enabled":true},{"name":"twitter","url":"https://twitter.com/intent/tweet?url=http%3a%2f%2fwww.spglobal.com%2fcommodityinsights%2fen%2fci%2fresearch-analysis%2fvenezuela-production-decline.html&text=Venezuela+production+decline+threatens+to+starve+heavy+refiners+%7c+S%26P+Global+","enabled":true},{"name":"linkedin","url":"https://www.linkedin.com/sharing/share-offsite/?url=http%3a%2f%2fwww.spglobal.com%2fcommodityinsights%2fen%2fci%2fresearch-analysis%2fvenezuela-production-decline.html","enabled":true},{"name":"email","url":"?subject=Venezuela production decline threatens to starve heavy refiners | S&P Global &body=http%3a%2f%2fwww.spglobal.com%2fcommodityinsights%2fen%2fci%2fresearch-analysis%2fvenezuela-production-decline.html","enabled":true},{"name":"whatsapp","url":"https://api.whatsapp.com/send?text=Venezuela+production+decline+threatens+to+starve+heavy+refiners+%7c+S%26P+Global+ http%3a%2f%2fwww.spglobal.com%2fcommodityinsights%2fen%2fci%2fresearch-analysis%2fvenezuela-production-decline.html","enabled":true}]}, {"name":"rtt","enabled":true,"mobdesc":"Top"} ]}
Filter Sort
  • About S&P Global Commodity Insights
  • Media Center
  • Advertisers
  • Locations
  • Get Support
  • Contact Us
  • Careers
  • Corporate Responsibility
  • History
  • Investor Relations
  • Leadership
  • Glossary
  • © 2023 by S&P Global Inc. All rights reserved.
  • Terms of Use
  • Do Not Sell My Personal Information
  • Privacy Policy & Cookie Notice
  • Site Map